
My Husband Let My Father Die for His Mistress
My Husband Let My Father Die for His Mistress Chapter 1
The darkness didn’t lift all at once. It receded like a tide, slow and greedy, clinging to the edges of my mind. But the sound—the sound was sharp. It was a voice that had scraped against my consciousness for five years, a rusty nail on the chalkboard of my paralysis.
"Damian, don't be dramatic. Of course I’ll meet you at Le Bernardin. It’s our anniversary, isn't it? technically."
*Carla.*
My eyelids felt like they were weighted with lead, but the rage burning in my chest was a powerful fuel. I forced them open. The world was a blur of sterile whites and the blinking red eye of a heart monitor, but the figure by the window was distinct. Carla Graham stood silhouetted against the Manhattan skyline, her posture relaxed, entitled.
She was wearing my necklace. The Van Cleef pendant Damian had given me for my twenty-fifth birthday glittered at her throat, a stolen star resting on skin that didn't deserve it.
For five years, I had been a statue in my own life. Locked-in syndrome, the doctors called it. A living ghost. I had felt every touch, heard every whisper, smelled the cloying sweetness of her perfume as she fucked my husband in the chair beside my bed. I had screamed in the silence of my own skull until my mind was raw.
Now, my throat felt like it was packed with broken glass, but I needed to speak. I needed to shatter her world the way she had shattered mine.
"Get out."
The words were a croak, barely audible over the hum of the machinery. Carla didn’t hear me. She laughed into her phone, twirling a lock of hair—a habit she’d copied from me back in high school.
I summoned every ounce of hatred I had stored in the dark. I pushed air through my atrophied vocal cords, ignoring the searing pain.
"Get out of my room, you parasite."
Carla froze. Her phone slipped from her fingers, clattering onto the linoleum floor. She spun around, her eyes wide, the color draining from her face until she looked like the corpse I was supposed to be. For a second, we just stared at each other—the resurrected wife and the thief who had been living in her skin.
"Ana?" she whispered, her voice trembling. Not with joy. With terror.
Nurses rushed in before I could answer, a flurry of blue scrubs and urgent voices checking vitals, drowning out the silence between us. Carla backed away, clutching her throat where my necklace burned against her skin, and fled into the hallway.
***
Damian arrived twenty minutes later. He looked disheveled, his tie crooked, sweat beading on his forehead. The handsome face that had once made my heart stutter now just looked like a mask.
"Ana! Oh, God, Ana!" He rushed to the bedside, tears streaming down his cheeks. He reached for my hand—the hand he had held while promising Carla he’d leave me once the life support was turned off.
I flinched. The movement was small, jerky, but it was enough. He froze, his hand hovering over mine.
"Baby, it's me," he choked out. "It's Damian. You're awake. It's a miracle."
He leaned in to kiss my forehead, and the smell hit me. *Santal 33*. Carla’s signature scent. It was clinging to his lapel, woven into the fabric of his suit. It made my stomach turn.
I looked at him, really looked at him. I saw the lines of stress around his eyes, the guilt he tried to pass off as shock. I didn't see my husband. I saw a stranger who had murdered the woman I used to be.
"Where were you on October 14th, Damian?" My voice was raspy, weak, but the question was a blade.
He blinked, confused. "What? Ana, you've been... you've been asleep for five years. Why are you asking—"
"October 14th," I repeated, watching his pupils dilate. "Last year. You told the nurses you were at a board meeting. But you were here. With her. Celebrating her birthday."
His face went slack. The color vanished. He opened his mouth, but no sound came out. He looked like a fish gasping on a dock.
"I... I don't know what you mean," he stammered, pulling at his collar. "You're confused, darling. The doctors said there might be hallucinations."
"I want Victoria Chen," I said, cutting through his lies. "Now."
"Victoria? Your estate lawyer? Ana, you just woke up. We should focus on your health, not—"
"Get her. Or I start screaming until the press hears me."
***
When Victoria arrived an hour later, the room was cleared. Damian was pacing in the hallway, barred from entry by my explicit demand. Victoria looked older, her sharp bob now streaked with gray, but her eyes were as intelligent as ever.
"Anastasia," she said softly, sitting by the bed. "It is good to see those eyes open."
"I need a divorce, Victoria."
She didn't gasp. She didn't argue. She simply opened her briefcase and clicked her pen. "I assumed as much given the urgency. What are the grounds?"
"Adultery," I said, staring at the ceiling tiles. " cruelty. Fraud. And soon, theft."
I turned my head to look at her. "I have locked-in syndrome, Victoria. I was aware. I know about the accounts he drained. I know about the Hamptons house being put in a trust I never signed. I know everything."
Victoria’s pen stopped moving. Her jaw tightened. "My God."
"But I can't fight him yet," I whispered, the exhaustion finally catching up to me. My body felt heavy, useless. "I'm weak. If he knows what I know, he'll hide the assets. Or worse."
I looked toward the door, where I knew Damian was waiting, likely texting Carla.
"Draft the papers," I commanded softly. "But don't file them yet. Tell everyone I have amnesia. Tell them my memory is Swiss cheese. Say I think it's 2018. Let them think I’m confused and broken."
A cold, dangerous smile touched my lips, a stranger's expression on my face.
"Let them get comfortable again, Victoria. I want to watch them hang themselves."
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